2012-10-01
2012-10-31
x ohio

STATION
MSNBC 10
MSNBCW 9
CNN 6
CNNW 6
WRC 5
CSPAN2 4
KNTV (NBC) 4
CNBC 3
KQED (PBS) 2
KRCB (PBS) 2
WJLA 2
WMAR (ABC) 2
WTTG 2
( more )
LANGUAGE
English 85

Set Clip Length:


rival's skates before a big competition. he says his coach urged him to do it. we'll talk with simon cho in an exclusive interview in just a few minutes. >>> and are chris brown and rihanna back together? hear what folks are saying about their possible reconciliation three years after brown brutally attacked rihanna. >>> and then we're going to switch gears and tell you about a legal reprieve for some high school cheer leaders in texas. the small town squad was tackling a big issue in school involving football and religion. we'll tell you what it's all about. >>> we want to begin this half-hour with the race for the white house. we are talking one month now until election day. both president obama and his republican challenger governor mitt romney are using friday's jobs report to bolster their campaign arguments. mike viqueira is at the white house. >> reporter: it is a huge number, it's good news for the unemployed, good political news for the president, but at least some people think the news is a little bit too good to be true. campaigning in ohio, the president seized on the new num

it. featured speakers include simon johnson, former chief economist with the imf, and karen petrou. this is just over an hour: >> thank you very much. i certainly hope and expect that this discussion will be as stimulating and exciting as the last panel. each of the panelists will speak for about ten minutes, and then we'll have an opportunity for colloquy among the panelists and then open for questions to the audience. we'll go in the following order, scheherazade will start us off, then anna will be second, simon third and karen fourth. so, scheherazade, please, kick us off. >> thank you. thank you, art. it's a pleasure to be here at she leaf's annual event. i will try not to put you too much into a gloomy mood. [laughter] if you're going to discuss the business of trying to predict what possibly is the next financial crisis, i think it's important to discuss the changing nature of these crises. thirty years ago we had what we now affectionately call the traditional type of crisis, only happened in emerging markets, and the contagion of this crisis was regional. so if brazil got

of their anti-poverty tour. i'll talk with sister simone campbell about that, and the presidential campaign, stay tuned. you're watching "the ed show" live from miami, florida. we're right back. . [ male announcer ] truth is, nyquil doesn't unstuff your nose. what? [ male announcer ] alka-seltzer plus liquid gels speeds relief to your worst cold symptoms plus has a decongestant for your stuffy nose. thanks. that's the cold truth! but with advair, i'm breathing better. so now i can be in the scene. advair is clinically proven to help significantly improve lung function. unlike most copd medications, advair contains both an anti-inflammatory and a long-acting bronchodilator working together to help improve your lung function all day. advair won't replace fast-acting inhalers for sudden symptoms and should not be used more than twice a day. people with copd taking advair may have a higher chance of pneumonia. advair may increase your risk of osteoporosis and some eye problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking advair. if you're still having dif

members. for more on this i'm joined by reuters mexico city bureau chief simon gardner. simon, how high up the hierarchy chain is heriberto lazcano >> right up at the top. he is the leader of the glet as. he has been locked in a bitter battle with the second, if you like, in command of the zetas. much of the bloodshed we've been seeing in mexico in recent months have been due to that feud >> suarez: since the president of mexico in effect declared war on the drug cartels have they ever caught as big a fish as this one? >> he's the biggest fish they've caught so far. i mean this is a coups for called reason. calderon's drug strategy which was to go after the heads of the different drug cartels was criticized by some for having created fragmentation and a deep deepening of violence. yet he is to a certain extent been vindicated today. he said so himself on television. this afternoon. so, you know, for calderon's strategy, which actually hurt his party in recent presidential election and helped boost his opponent or the opponent of his party, he is now, you know, reaping the benefits of this.

and that result. joining me now, simon rosenberg, a former clinton campaign adds advisor and ben ferguson. when the president claimed he said it was terror at the town hall debate, that he said that september 12, now we see the information coming in in realtime about the 20 guys and how the ambassador was locked in the safe room and we know how it wound up. that was the first question i wondered was if he night was terror. there is no question he knew four americans were dead. but he knew it was terror. was it appropriate for him to go to vegas on the first, you know, the first time he acknowledges we had a terror attack on his watch? >> well, clearly he did because he went. we are at the very ends of this campaign. i'm sure that was not an easy decision to make. but it also was over. it was handled. we had people in place managing this for him. this is a large government. we have a large military intelligence apparatus. i think they made the decision it had ended it had been settled, we were starting to get information coming in and he didn't change his public or private schedule that day. pre

that is a "bs-er." that is my own cleanup version. he goes onto say that he can tell. simon rosenberg, president and founder of think tank organization and former adviser to president clinton, and mark easton, a fellow at the cato institute. i know people talk like this about things behind closed doors. i am not dramatically from the president of the united states. this isn't battleship president, governor romney, and oh, he is a "bs-er." he said that rolling stone magazine. is it appropriate, simon? >> i don't think it is any mystery that this is a brutal campaign, megyn. people are fighting hard for what they believe. i think this is normal and look at what barack obama has been called. he has been called a socialist, people have said he didn't have a birth certificate and wasn't born here, the attacks have been unprecedented in some ways. they have been said about him. this is a rough business these days, and i think that we are seeing it in the final days of the campaign. megyn: i think a lot of them will say bring it on. it's the presidency on the line. >> he has a lot of people he needs to

that there would be if the government had cuts of that kind. you had simone campbell on who pointed out that there's a study by bread for the world showing if you took the food stamp cuts, every church would have to come up with $50,000. most churches don't have that money. you shouldn't be cutting people off food stamps and expecting groups to pick up all that slack. >> ryan has said that 30% of americans want a welfare state. 30% of people are takers. how does he square those comments with this visit here? what was it all about? >> i think it's been clear for awhile, especially since the 47% video, that the republicans said whoops, where did that compassionate conservatism go. we better show we have a heart somehow because those comments are hurting us. they don't want to talk about budgets. they want to put out feel-good words and mitt romney offered some of those in the first debate. and they want to give us pictures that say we have big hearts. well, you can't make bricks without straw. show us what your priorities are. some of it should come from voluntarily contributions, but we built these

whether or not to sue google. it's a lawsuit many say can't possibly add up. dan simon has the story. >> the top voice recognition software -- >> reporter: on a recent episode of "the good wife" a small software company took a giant search engine to court alleging it was being unfairly buried in search results. >> we dropped overnight, we dropped. now you have to flip through 28 pages of search results to find us. >> reporter: that mirrors some of the real life allegations against google. antitrust authorities here and in europe are investigating whether google manipulates its search results and puts its products higher or more prominently to the detriment of competitors. >> you've cooked it. you are always third. >> senator, senator, may i simply say that i can assure you we have not cooked anything. >> reporter: google's chairman eric schmidt faced tough questions last year while testifying in front of a senate subcommittee. >> -- seems to suggest it favors google products. is that true? >> as i said, first, i disagree with that characterization. what i said over and over again was

you so much, simon. time for six in swing state 60. six stocks in 60 seconds. jim, who's in ohio. we'll start with united rentals. >> yesterday the stock was up gigantically. why? the renting of capital equipment is strong. i think that's a positive sign for the economy. >> we haven't talked much ebay. earnings last night? >> carl, i think you guys are going to be discussing it with simon. this was a triquarter for paypal. that's what matters. much better growth than american express, which was open. >> was key corp. the best earnings so far? >> i think key corp. actually tops citigroup as far as being the best. this was really good data interest margin. the only other one that had it is citi. >> ibc downgrading potash. >> potash needs to lower its costs. the way to do that is use american natural gas. more on that tonight. >> mellanox, you say is blowing up. >> this is an israeli based company. they did tepid guidance. not enough. >> and lowering the value on facebook. >> i can't emphasize enough. there's a big lock-up. be careful, facebook. >> you've got a lot tonight, and it's not

and catholics? >> absolutely. there's an amazing story- you've heard of the mennonites- simon menno? he is one of the ones that tries to get some common ground, because when this explodes, this anabaptist fervor- for instance, the town of munster, a group of radical anabaptists took over the town, and they said, "jesus is coming back at any time now, and we need to be holy." so they took over the town, and they actually persecuted lutherans and catholics in it. well, shortly thereafter, an army made up of both protestants and catholics surrounded the town, and many people were- died. now out of that, someone, like mennonites, like simon, comes out of there and says, "we have to have a more neutral path." and so a certain set of doctrines were developed that the amish eventually draw on. jacob amman, the founder of the amish, tries to find a ground that is not radical, that is not so disruptive, but keeps that wall there. and we look to that period of time, where we're talking about the avoidance- you've heard of the shunning, or avoidance, the ban- that becomes part of it. if somebody has fall

: so who won? joining us now for a fair and balanced debate, simon rosenberg and founder of mdn and former clinton campaign advisor. ron bonjean with us as well on the right of your screen. former communications director for former house speaker dennis hastert. simon, to you first, it is a who won question but also a question about who advanced their campaign priorities the most. give us your take. >> sure. i mean every poll and every focus group done last night had barack obama winning the debate and i think, you know, the democrats feel very good today. we have won three out of the last 4-d bates. we feel like we have momentum going the final two weeks. it is very hard to hearing argue that mitt romney won the debate. charles catt hahmer made a valiant effort that to make that he won the night and there is no polling date to evidence of that. if you want to come in the final debate and do a good job. you want to come out with momentum and troops fired up. that is not the case for republicans today. i think democrats feel confident. we're ahead in the electoral college. 2/3 of

a fox news contributor. simon rosenberg, the president and founder of the new democrat network. a former clinton campaign advisor. you heard governor romney there in florida. florida has had its share of misery. i was living there when hurricane andrew hit. how do you conduct a political campaign in this environment, simon, you know, when so many people are hurting, have no power, the last thing they want to hear or on television on the radio is another attacked a? >> well i think there, the president is being the president. i mean he's out, obviously at red cross and at fema and he is clearly leading the recovery effort right now. i think he has a little bit of a political advantage over mitt romney in the sense that mitt romney is just a candidate trying to talk about what is going on when the president has the advantage of actually being responsible for the recovery effort right now. and i think he is doing a good job. he has been praised by pub be republicans and democrats alike last few days for being responsive to their needs. he is going up to new jersey with chris christie to tak

with melissa francis" and simon conscious bl is author of "the wall street journal" guide to the 50 economic indicators that really matter. i don't know whether people are sitting at home saying it's the jobs report coming, isn't it? i've got to know! but this is the kind of thing that could tip some voters one way or another. if the president gets a great number and can say i told you, we are going in the right direction, look at the jobs report, or if the unemployment rate goes up, mitt romney can say what he's been saying which is this is not what a real recovery looks like. so we expect it to come out. do we know at this point, simon, where we expect it to be? >> my gut is telling me, and having looked at a lot of other data related to this, is it's going to be flat to up. we're going to see either the same unemployment rate, 7.8 percent, or slightly up. megyn: so up is bad. >> up is bad. megyn: more people unemployed. >> and we're going to see a very modest growth in payrolls, and companies are going to add a relatively modest number of people to their work force. so it's something a li

to chesapeake this afternoon and back to leesburg tonight. sarah simons has more. as i'm reading that, they're busy. >> yes, they are. >> how do they do it? >> i don't know. they were feisty last night. >> everywhere. >> and allison and tony, you know, as you mentioned, it's the second predential debate and in there, it was supposed to be driven by questions from the immediate audience and quickly got heated. at times, seemed to spin a bit out of control. >> candy what, governor romney said it was not true. >> reporter: from the outset, it was clear this is going to be a different debate from the last one. >> you will get your chance in a moment. i'm still speak. >> reporter: after what the president acknowledged was a weak showing at the first debate two weeks ago, this time he was engaged and on the attack. >> governor romney doesn't have a five-point plan but a one- point plan and that plan is to make sure that folks at the top play by a different set of rules. >> how about $4 trillion of deficits over the last four years, 5 trillion. that is math that doesn't add up. >> reporter: the mo

their tax breaks? joining me tonight is sister simone campbell, leader of the nuns on the bus. sister, good to have you with us tonight. let's do the math, if we can, for just a moment. do you believe most churches have an extra $50,000 lying around to pick up the tab that ryan describes himself as a man of faith? how do we get through all of this? do the churches have the kind of money to follow the plan that he's putting forth? >> absolutely not. i mean, it's really shocking to think that he believes that churches can do this. what he doesn't know is how hard people are working right now, how much they depend on the food subsidies, just even to get food on family tables and how churches are stretched already in food pantries, feeding programs, all kinds of places already giving so much. this $50,000 for each house of worship would be an additional amount to what they have already raised. it's impossible. >> do people in the inner city need to be taught good discipline and good character. that's what paul ryan believes. >> i know. it's pretty shocking because he clearly has not been where

vote. two electoral college. three randy paul and simon with the tiebreaker. folks who save hundreds of dollars switching to geico sure are happy. i'd say happier than a slinky on an escalator. get happy. get geico. melons!!! oh yeah!! well that was uncalled for. folks who save hundreds of dollars switching to geico sure are happy. how happy, ronny? happier than gallagher at a farmers' market. get happy. get geico. and one wedding, 2 kids, 43 bottles of olay total effects many birthdays later, still looks amazing. thanks to the trusted performance of olay. still looks amazing. when you take a closer look... ...at the best schools in the world... ...you see they all have something very interesting in common. they have teachers... ...with a deeper knowledge of their subjects. as a result, their students achieve at a higher level. let's develop more stars in education. let's invest in our teachers... ...so they can inspire our students. let's solve this. >>> it's the final fight for florida, the sunshine state, the battleground grand prize with 29 electoral votes. the obama and romney

for policy and he was and is ill suited to be the message. joining me now is sister simone campbell, catholic social justice group and organizer of the nuns to protest romney/ryan budget and how it would hurt the poor. sister campbell, thank you for coming on the show tonight. >> an honor to be with you, reverend. >> i found it rather shocking. he seemed to mention a few names and he has no idea about really how hard people work and the programs create dependence. that's not our experience. that's not what we know. i keep wishing he will complete the people we know. >> take a listen. >> wherever we are in live, rich or poor, black, brown, or white, american by chance or by choice, we are one nation. that is the promise of america. we can make it real in lives in the american, to all those americans we ask you to look at our because our cause is yours and yours is ours. >> but that contrast in the past where ryan talked, he spoke like he almost had disdain for the poor. listen to this. >> we could become a society where the net majority of americans are taker, not makers. 70% of americans want

help" she's now working on detective models. simon and shuster announced that the first book randy rhodes, ninja detectives will be out next fall. spencer said she hopes to give kids the same sense of magic that she found reading nancy drew and encyclopedia brown. i remember nancy drew. >>> beyonce will be an empty chair at the next clint eastwood movie. >>> justin bieber becomes the victim of a real crime and a fake crime. it's time for hollywood headlines. and joining us now, cohost with the russ parr morning show. so georgia, justin bieber is the latest victim of a host but he also lost something pretty special to him. >> yeah, he did. he was at a concert in tacoma, washington, performing, someone stole his laptop and computer, and his tour manager's stuff. he tweeted about it. he said, this stuff was really special to me. you should respect other people's things. also he's a victim of swatting. that is the new trend for people in los angeles, fans are swatting. what they did is called a place and said, somebody's waving a gun near justin bieber's los angeles house. of course, a

-factor, the judges continue to narrow down the contestants. only 24 will travel to brittany, simon, demi, and l.a.'s home. joined by celebrity mentors to help decide their fate. >> that's exactly the group that i wanted. >> it's going to be tough. >> this is when you get to separate from the other three judges. you're one on one. much more control of the situation. you are choosing the material. >> the challenges, it's going to be hard having to be in a situation to tell them no and make them go home. >> fact that i'm in the position now where i can help somebody and take somebody under my wings is just an incredible feeling. >> you have some good news for me. >> audience will find which teams the judges will be coaching. word is, l.a. reid is not happy with his while brittany on the other hand, seems to be feeling very confident. >> oh yes, they are winners in my category. >> for the mentors who include mark anthony, justin bieber, will iam and nick jonas. this is a time to do what they do best. >> there's something sexy about her. >> part of the challenge with the role that i have ta

.com and simon rosenberg, from a leading progressive think tank and former clinton campaign advisor as well. we brought you both on because you have differing views of the debate last night. mary katherine you think essentially it was a draw. >> i think it was more contentious because in the first debate only one side was fightinging a many even on the left have said. obama would come to the table with more this time, be more aggressive. i think romney relies less on likeability than obama does. there is more risk for him coming after somebody hard that way. i think mostly a tie. see in post-debate polling, a slight win for obama on the top line but when you look a little bit lower on issues like the economy and both cnn and "cbs poll" a double-digit lead for romney how he handled that and the debt. those are really important issues. i'm not sure that a narrow second debate win overcomes those. jon: simon, you wrote that you don't think mitt romney showed himself to be a strong leader last night. you think he hurt himself with this performance? >> yeah. i think on balance this was a very import

in the house, for example. >> reporter: you know, if i were the romney campaign, simon, i've got multiple things to worry about. that would be one of the least things that i have to worry about. what he's got to do more than anything else is get the share up among women. he tried to do that at the convention. he needs to do it right now. especially white college-educated women. mitt romney has got to get about 60% of the white vote. he's fine among white men to get there but needs to do better among white women, especially upscale suburban white women, the kind that turned away from him on some social issues and the role of government. that's the opening for him and he's got to cease it. >> coverage of the first presidential debate begins at 8:00 p.m. eastern time here on cnbc. carl quintanilla, maria, and others will be hosting that. >> shares are down of metropcs. making it the fourth largest wireless company behind sprint. so often left out in the cold. what is next for sprint on hopes of the user base? we're joined by jim, an analyst. thank you for joining us. >> good morning. >> as w

started through the network lobby. it's a group of american sisters, sister simone campbell hoaring named the first one which went through nine states a couple of months ago through iowa and all the way through virginia. she was in studio with us before they went on the trip and the day they got back to washington d.c. the whole emphasis was bring attention to the ryan budget, the nuns believe this is not the direction a catholic church ought to be supporting in their government wrong policies and particularly pertinent, because ryan himself is such you a big catholic. since then, sister simone campbell told us the other day there have been many, many different states where groups of nuns have said hey we want to do a nones on the bus tour in our state or this state. they even did one on the stanton island ferry which is just a nuns on the ferry. >> sure. >> bill: and so we had planned right now and looking at dan to find out what's going on to be talking to the latest nuns on the bus tour is in ohio, where they were met by protestors from the tea party. ok? now, the tea party actually --

god. all right. >> simon cowell's got at least another year of work. fox yesterday announced it will pick up the reality show x factor for a third season although it's gotten nowhere near the ratings of "american idol." fans seem to be happy with the new judges demi lovato and britney spears. >> bill: simon cowell. i don't think he has to worry about it. >> i haven't been watching the x factor. >> bill: who are these people? >> tiger woods is trying something new. he's building a golf course. >> not chitting? >> golf.com reports the star golfer is trying his hand as course architect designing his first one doing so at a resort in cabo in mexico. the 14-time major champion says it will be a course that anybody of any experienced level will be able to enjoy. no word on how many more courses he wants to build and how much he's getting paid but it is costing $12 million to build. >> bill: it is costing $12 million because they have to bring the water from northern california. baja, california, it is a freaking

than your traditional ipad. and starting price tag of 329 bucks. we have dan simon and katie linendaal standing by outside this spot where this announcement has just taken place in san jose. dan simon, first to you, any big surprises? >> you know what, brooke, thanks to the internet, and all the leaks coming probably from apple suppliers, we didn't really see any surprises. they updated the imac, we saw the new 13 inch mac book pro. i guess what surprised me is the price of this ipad, $329. their competitors are a lot more aggressive when it comes to the price, $199 from google, $159 from amazon. so that was surprising to me. how about you? >> that was a big thing for me. as we head into holiday, tablet is a hot ticket item. for me, 329 bucks for the ipad mini, we have amazon kindles starting at $159, the nexus 7 at 200 bucks. for a consumer, $200 to $329 is a big difference. so i like to say, let's grab some popcorn and watch this play out because it is going to be interesting what consumers go for. if you want e-mail and the internet, can do that with any tablet. >> i have an ipad, i

would love to hear your reaction to simon cowell possibly wanting carmen electra to be one of the judges on america's got talent. >> i think it's great. simon has a great gut instinct. he's great at what he does. and i go along with his choice. it's a great show to -- >> are you wanting out? >> 6th season, it has been an unbelievable ride. >> what about howard stern? >> i know howard personally we have been friends for 25 years. it's not like i am never going to see howard. our friendship is that song it will continue. it's time to do other things. >> you are busy because you are not only doing that but you are also doing "the talk" as well and you are an ambassador for the at kin's diet. you lost a lot of weight. you look fantastic. >> i am. thank you. thank you. it was time. turning 60 it's like okay do i really want to turn 60 and still be uncomfortable in my clothes and trying to wear things that make me look slimmer than i am, it's like, no, enough. deal with it. >> why the atkins diet? there are millions of diets. that's the one where you eat bacon all of the time? >> you know what

oates, psychologist steven pinker, my colleague. a historian, simon schama. this has always been a major national book prize with a host of us any previous winners, including among so many others, links to use, zora neale hurston, and the reverend or the king junior. and now, thanks to the vision, committed in sheer energy of one person, we now have a hot website and live streaming video of our event, national press club in several supporting lectures and presentations. you all know that one person is the lifeblood of the anisfield-wolf book awards, my dear friend and comrade, mary louise hunt. give it up for mary louise. stand up, mary louise. [applause] our annual ceremony has become an event in cleveland social intellectual calendar and that takes an entire team of people to pull off, including ron of course, but also sandy shoals. cindy, please stand up in the six other team members who have worked for months to create this evening. give it up to cindy. [applause] as mary louise put it to me just yesterday, and i quote an e-mail, making sure it's going to be here, she e-mailed me thr

bill press does this every morning. every morning. anyway. >> bill: you and sister simon campbell are the only two guests i know of that show up on their bikes. >> so a nun? >> bill: yes. and it's a little more difficult for her to ride because she has that great big habit. >> okay. she doesn't wear that come on. >> bill: so how are you? >> i am well. thank you. >> bill: let's talk about the gay rights issues. on obama and romney is there a clear difference? >> sure, undoubtedly. i mean -- >> bill: it is like night and day? >> it is like night and day. first of all, you know, president obama came out for support same-sex marriage. so that is huge. he essentially took the issue off of the table because of that. >> bill: it took him a long time by the way. >> it did. and certainly it's not the only issue -- >> bill: but a huge difference. >> yes, because romney supports the federal marriage amendment. just yesterday there was a piece floated at buzzfeed saying that -- you know -- >> bill: he was dropping his support. so all of our listeners and viewers understand. th

tonight show," with jay leno on monday. please try to behavior yourself for once, simon. she is also a cover girl again, smiling from the cover of "lucky" magazine's december issue. >> to come from a place where we feared for her life, to become one of the highest paid stars in the whole entertainment industry right now. she's truly a role model for turning your life around. >> nothing like having all of your dirty laundry aired in a public forum like that. >>> you know how hard it is to get kids to eat their greens. look at one woman who has never grown out of it. she's only eaten three things her whole life. not a single fruit or vegetable on the list. linsey davis has the story. >> what's this stuff? >> some cereal. >> reporter: these guys never thought they would get finicky mikey to like life cereal. >> he likes it. hey, mikey. >> reporter: and children are known for their extremely picky eating habits. but you never met a picky eater quite like marla. any hummus? >> no. >> reporter: not a single thing in this aisle you would eat? >> no. >> reporter: would you go banana bread, m

's published by simon and schuster which is a division of cbs. >> author doris kearns goodwin will join us here on november 15th. this morning we shared an excerpt from the book online along with discussion questions from goodwin. >> you'll also find new featured material, such as lincoln's rare manuscripts and images of his family's belongings provided by the abraham lincoln presidential library. it's all on cbsthismorning.com because "cbs this morning" reads. and speaking of reading, we've got an author that we know you're reading already. tom wolf's new novel is about race, class, and sex, with palm trees in the background. there he is in his iconic trademark white suit. ♪ >>> tom wolf is one of the world's most recognizable authors. he's written more than a dozen books, including "the right stuff" and "the bonfire of the vanities." >> his latest novel is his first in eight years. "back to blood" takes place in present day miami and it is already getting a whole lot of attention. he is here in studio 57. we're pleased about that. welcome. >> thank you very much. >> you have made cities fam

in june. writing, quote, i'm delighted to announce that simon and i are expecting our first child together. obviously, we're over the moon. and now, in the latest issue of "people" magazine, a family source reveals the 24-year-old british powerhouse is, quote, nesting. picking out furniture for the baby's room and trying to choose names. in 2008, she told the magazine, she really wanted to be a mom. >> adele told "people" magazine a few years ago, she wants three boys by the time she's 30. right now, she's changed. she stopped drinking and smoking. and she's really focusing on her pregnancy. ♪ this is the end >> reporter: in the mean tile, adele's topping the charts again. ♪ hold your breath and count to ten ♪ >> reporter: singing the new bond theme song, "skyfall," just released. >> a source said adele was hesitant to do a bond theme because she was worried it might be cheesy. once she accepted the gig, she took it very seriously. >> reporter: bond's star, daniel craig, told jimmy fallon, that adele was his first choice for the theme. >> when adele's name came up, i jumped at it. >>

valley correspondent dan simon is looking into it for us. >> reporter: steve merryfield owns a high-end sporting goods shop. after 27 years in business, he'd been preparing to sell it. all the records for potential buyers stored on his computer server. so he was more than concerned when he realized all his data had been frozen. >> the last words i remember is, this is not good. this is not good. >> reporter: it turned out hackers had taken control of his machine and flashed a message. for $3,000 he could have his data back. but it didn't stop there. he'd have to fork over an additional $1,000 for each week he didn't comply. he'd become a victim of what's being called ransomware. had you ever heard the term rans ransomware before? >> no. i can say that it's, you know, appropriately named. you feel victimized. you feel helpless. >> reporter: ransomware is becoming so pervasive that it prompted the fbi to put out a warning. the bureau says it's getting dozens of complaints each day. >> it's one of the more destructive pieces of malware. they'll encrypt the files and if you don't pay, t

. harper collins, simon and shuster and hischett. good luck figuring out if you bought some of their books. >>> stick around, "squawk" will be right back up your game. up the ante. and if you stumble, you get back up. up isn't easy, and we ought to know. we're in the business of up. everyday delta flies a quarter of million people while investing billions improving everything from booking to baggage claim. we're raising the bar on flying and tomorrow we will up it yet again. he loves risk. but whether he's climbing everest, scuba diving the great barrier reef with sharks, or jumping into the market, he goes with people he trusts, which is why he trades with a company that doesn't nickel and dime him with hidden fees. so he can worry about other things, like what the market is doing and being ready, no matter what happens, which isn't rocket science. it's just common sense, from td ameritrade. >>> welcome back to "squawk box." we are a few seconds away from retail sales data. i believe 0.8% is what economists are looking for. rick santelli is standing by at the cme in chicago. take it away

, analytical, less swayed by emotion. it is a personality that comes from simon baron-cohen. he has a bunch of items that will give you a score, the drive to understand the variables in a system and how they govern the behavior of the system. if you understand subway maps, sheets, if you enjoy doing that, it is the drive to identify the of motions another person is to -- experiencing. there is a big sex difference here. men are higher on systematizing and women are higher on that. if you analyze only the men, libertarian men are the highest of any of the three groups and they are the lowest on empathizing. libertarians are the only group whose scores are higher than their empathizing scores. this reflects a lot of things happening. many point to the feminizing of the democratic party. it has not only got more female, but it has gotten more feminine. there are a whole bunch of other studies, and i can tell you like this. it is a whole year -- a measure of reasoning, we have logic problems were you can get it wrong. tolerance of ambiguity, libertarians are the highest. there is one exception,

drives the gym to get. many catholic groups are most notable in networks led by sister simone and the nuns on the bus have been vocal critics of the ryan budget which would cut spending of social services. republicans have been heavily influenced by the tea party movement in the past three years, and the tea party espouses of course that government should be far less responsible for providing the service. they believe that when the government provides social welfare it creates a culture of dependency among americans but i was struck that paul ryan use those words talk about welfare reform. so the american values survey asked americans whether they were more likely to agree that government policy and helping the poor served as a critical safety net or whether they create a culture of dependency where people are provided with too many handouts. so figure nine shows the percentage of americans were more likely to say that those policies create a culture of dependency. it's relatively few, only 32% of americans say social welfare policies create a culture of dependency. there is a

simon who has a sense of what is taking place right now. the main suspect has not yet been arrested. what do we know? >> reporter: yeah, suzanne. so far i've spoken to one of the senior police officials involved in the investigation. he tells me they have six people in custody, but they believe key facilitators around this attack, they all are local men from malala's hometown. they suspect that maybe some of them went to afghanistan where the plot was hatched and returned to pakistan where they carried out the attack. now, the main suspect, as you say, they have identified is a man called -- he went on to do a masters in chemistry. he is one of the main suspects involved in shooting this 15-year-old school girl all because she was fighting for an education. >> have they been able to actually talk to the main suspect about the motive behind this, because this was just horrific when we heard this young girl being attacked simply for encouraging people to go to school. >> althis stage they weren't able to share information about the process or what they may have found out from the susp

seriously. i learned that the duke simone in conservative gossip at the court of louis the 14th thought his contribution to society was so great that in his memoirs he wrote 3,000 paejz published in 40 volumes. i can't produce that and there's a whole pair docks. >> imagine that dude on twitter. vicky. >> we can't take the gender gap for granted, that preference of democrats by women. you know, we've been seeing so much bounce in the polls in terms of women in 2010. we also saw a preference for republicans by women. in 2012 i don't know what's going to happen. is this going to be an exception or more of the same? >> this is a big thing to keepure eyes on. women do vote differently for men. they have for some time. my thanks to all of you. thank you for getting up, and thank you for joining us today for "up." join us tomorrow sunday morning at 8:00, and we'll preview monday's presidential debate on foreign policy with -- coming up next is today's mhp. this week in voter suppression, the confusion edition as courts strike down one technique after another, there are people still at work active

, the elevator or your room, thinking you're going to start this business. >> this comes from a guy named simon cynic who i met early on in my program. he said to me, look, everyone can say what your company does, but that doesn't connect people emotionally. what you need to do is explain why you do it. that's why you go to this stationery store instead of this stationery store. not because the product is so much better, but because of the emotion, the why you started this. >> i like number 40. improve yourself confidence by standing differently. this applies to -- i hope any woman watching will listen to what you have to say. it sounds strange at first but it is absolutely true. >> it does. i was very cynical when we went to meet this woman who explained this to me. amy cutty is at harvard business school. she did a study that basically said you can stand in certain positions that releases testosterone in your body for both men and women. what that does is makes you more kf debt confident or before you are going into a meeting or on a show where you'll be nervous. stand in a room, put your arm

are in the nose bleeds up high, but we are happy to be there. neil simon theater. >> first preview. we'll work out the kinks. you are a big part of the process and i thank you all so much. >> we don't usually start off the show apologizing. >> i am not going to do it today. when i do something wrong i will apologize. >> we talked about lindsay lohan yesterday and people didn't like it. >> she made news, is the problem. we don't want to have to talk about lindsay lohan. we wished we didn't have to. we wish this young woman and her mother would both go into rehab, get the help they need, go on to live wonderful, fruitful, beautiful lives, but as long as they keep making news, it behooves us at nbc news to report it. we don't want to. >> here is what happened. let's get into the juicy details. they got into a fight at the club. they went out to long island to the mom's house. there was a fight that ensued. lindsay called her father, okay? >> this is unbelievable. >> what the father did after listening to this, i guess she said her mother is on cocaine, according to this, and is the f'ing devil right

is opening at the neil simon theater tomorrow night for previews on west 52nd street. >> can you believe it? >> no. i want to thank all of our crew here. >> we want to show our crew. they decided to deck out. pull it down, all the way down. we only had mediums. only mediums. >> he looks like winnie the pooh. >> anyways, you can get tickets if you go to broadway.com. >> scandalous @broadway.com. >> you do know. because it's previews and we're watching it all come together, they are two for one. >> bring a friend, especially if you have a friend that might be hurting a little bit. people seem to find hope in this film, which is great. >> absolutely. >> anyway, hoda, how are you, you're coming? >> saturday night, we're all going to be there with bells on. it's going to be a fun party. >> hopefully, i can announce people on monday people can have lunch and have a glass of wine with you and i on wines day wednesday. >> anyway, there is something in the social cues column that we found kind of interesting. this is what it was, taryn writes this, i have an uncommon first name. it's often mispronou

yourself as shy, and here you've become not the front man. i guess simon was the front man. >> definitely got a lot of attention for a bass player, not what i had in mind. i was in a quiet spot in the corner of the stage, but, yeah. >> you were in a moment in the '80s were videos were the thing, and you -- this band really captured and embodied that moment. when we look at "rio" or "hungry like the wolf," right here, were there stylers and producers or was this all you guys? >> we had done it very cheaply. the four of us had gone on a vacation together and the film crew came and jumped on the back end of the vacation. sri lanka, stopped off on the way to australia. they were made on a shoestring, those videos >> you mentioned a couple of moments ago your struggle with addiction. this was the '80s. you were the hottest rock star in the world. there must have been temptations everywhere. >> there was temptation everywhere, yes, but, i mean, for the most part it was -- yeah, i mean, you know, you just get involved. part of telling of the story was -- was like i think in a way if you had been

accounting for some of the funding differential that simon of lightly references at the same time they are playing a morally without the safety net that would save them meaning that market shock in the case of either operational, sovereignty or liquidity risk of a large institution would be worse. it would be lanham brothers on steroids. that's what scares me and why we need to go back to the liquidation of authority. could work in across borders attritions? does anything work in a cross border situation? not well to read about 80% of all banks offshore assets are held in the u.k. and that is particularly true for the wholesale oriented institutions like jpmorgan. they are operating in 70 countries but to what they've got in bulgaria is not systemic. maybe in bulgaria is. that is a different question. to chase and the u.k. it isn't. those are afterthought operations. that's why the u.s. and the u.k. are very fall along and what they called a crisis management group to resolve that aspect of cross border banking. is it done? no peery dividing durkan and i can answer your questions

and saying, this is our representation of the catholic church is wrong, we've also seen it with sister simone campbell, who spoke at the democratic national convention, another example of saying, hey, listen, we are fair and balanced, but we're going to do it in a way that's not fair. >> clayton: earlier when you said you're through being frustrated, i don't know if i believe you. father john-- >> you know what? i should probably go to confession. >> father john, always nice to see you. >> thank you. >> so much for transparency, the president dodging questions about the terror attack in libya, but can he keep ignoring the issue until the election? congressman mike kelly is demanding answers and the congressman will be joining us next on the show. >> alisyn: and he got away with an awful crime until he was shot by a 12-year-old girl. the calm and collected hero joins us live to share her story. 4g lte is the fastest. so, which supeast 4g lte service would yochoose, based on this chart ? don't rush into it, i'm not looking for the fastest answer. obviously verizon. okay, i have a different char

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